American Masters

Laura Ingalls Wilder: Prairie to Page

An unvarnished look at the unlikely “Little House” series author whose autobiographical fiction helped shape American ideas of the frontier and self-reliance.

Laura Ingalls Wilder: Prairie to Page

1h 23m

An unvarnished look at the unlikely “Little House” series author whose autobiographical fiction helped shape American ideas of the frontier and self-reliance.

Previews + Extras

  • Laura Ingalls Wilder: Prairie to Page trailer: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Laura Ingalls Wilder: Prairie to Page trailer

    S34 E7 - 3m 26s

    An unvarnished look at the unlikely author whose autobiographical fiction helped shape American ideas of the frontier and self-reliance. A Midwestern farm woman who published her first novel at age 65, Laura Ingalls Wilder transformed her frontier childhood into the best-selling “Little House” series.

  • The letter from NY that changed Laura Ingalls Wilder's life: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The letter from NY that changed Laura Ingalls Wilder's life

    S34 E7 - 1m 49s

    At age 64, Wilder received unexpected news from a New York editor: She was on her way to becoming a children’s author. The manuscript she had mailed had eventually turned into “Little House in the Big Woods.” Wilder said that upon the book’s success and reading all the letters she received from children around the country she began to think “what a wonderful childhood I had had.”

  • How the logs of the "Little House" cabin were stolen: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    How the logs of the "Little House" cabin were stolen

    S34 E7 - 2m 8s

    The famous little house on the prairie was built by Charles Ingalls on land he very likely knew belonged to the Osage Indians, according to Laura Ingalls Wilder biographer Caroline Fraser. The logs he used to build the house and the land were stolen.

  • Disaster was looming when the Ingalls moved to Minnesota: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Disaster was looming when the Ingalls moved to Minnesota

    S34 E7 - 2m 14s

    In 1874, the Ingalls family moved to Plum Creek in Minnesota. They built what was likely the nicest house they’d ever lived in, the weather was perfect and they expected a perfect crop that would pay off their debts. Then disaster struck with the arrival of the Rocky Mountain locust invasion of 1875.

  • The word that Laura refused to say in her wedding vows: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The word that Laura refused to say in her wedding vows

    S34 E7 - 3m 35s

    Laura's charming courtship with Almanzo Wilder culminated in a wedding ceremony in which Laura refused to say the word "obey" because she didn't want to make a promise she couldn't keep. At this time in her life, she also demonstrated a very early talent for writing that would get noticed by her teacher.

  • Until she was an author, money was a struggle for Wilder: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Until she was an author, money was a struggle for Wilder

    S34 E7 - 2m 20s

    Laura and Almanzo Wilder had a fresh start with 40 acres on Rocky Ridge Farm in Mansfield, Missouri, a place that Laura Ingalls Wilder lived in for 62 years. But until she became a best-selling author, life was a constant struggle to make ends meet for Wilder. She and her husband, Almanzo always had second or even third jobs.

  • The secret mother-daughter collaboration on “Little House”: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    The secret mother-daughter collaboration on “Little House”

    S34 E7 - 4m 6s

    Recent scholarship has shed light on the secret collaboration between Widler and her daughter Rose Wilder Lane on the “Little House” series. Rose encouraged her mother to write the books worked closely with her on the crafting and initial editing of the stories. Though Rose denied any involvement with the books, a series of letters between the two collaborators reveals much more.

  • "Little House" TV stars Alison Arngrim and Dean Butler: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    "Little House" TV stars Alison Arngrim and Dean Butler

    S34 E7 - 2m 58s

    Two stars of the “Little House” TV series, Alison Arngrim (Nellie Oleson) and Dean Butler (Almanzo Wilder), talk about the international impact of the show, including how it was a favorite of both Ronald Reagan and the Ayatollah of Iran!

  • Roxane Gay and others on racist “Little House” depictions: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Roxane Gay and others on racist “Little House” depictions

    S34 E7 - 2m 23s

    In this clip from American Masters — Laura Ingalls Wilder: Prairie to Page, Roxane Gay, Louise Erdrich, Pamela Smith Hill, Linda Sue Park and others discuss Wilder’s racist depictions of American Indian and Black people in the “Little House” book series.

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